US manufacturing sector is seeing ‘record investment’, says Pence

The manufacturing sector is experiencing a dramatic turnaround in business, according to figures released by the White House.

President Donald Trump has consistently said he wants the manufacturing sector to grow and has personally intervened to persuade many large manufacturing companies to consider relocating or expanding their operations in the US.

However, the vast majority of manufacturing companies in the US are small businesses, of less than 100 people.

To highlight what might be considered a typical manufacturing company, Vice President Mike Pence visited a factory in Cleveland, Ohio for a photo-op and for an excuse to highlight some statistics he says indicates “American manufacturing is back”.

The factory belongs to Tendon Manufacturing, which started almost 30 years ago with six employees, and now employs more than 75 in what Pence says are “good-paying manufacturing jobs”.

Pence adds: “Companies like Tendon Manufacturing in Cleveland, Ohio … are truly the engine of the American economy and the beating heart of our national life.

“This business is what America is all about.”

Pence watches as a worker at Tendon shows him some of the processes at the factory of 75 people

On the administration’s policies, Pence says: “In the first five months of last year, American manufacturers lost 24,000 jobs. But in the first five months of this year, under President Trump, businesses large and small have created more than 600,000 new good-paying jobs – including 55,000 new jobs in manufacturing.

“Going back decades, manufacturers have invested in jobs and factories in other countries – but this year, company after company is making record investments worth billions of dollars in this country.

“And today, American manufacturers are more optimistic than at any point in the past 20 years.

“Confidence is back, and manufacturing is back, because since Day One of this Administration, President Trump has been fighting tirelessly for manufacturers and the men and women who work on factory floors.”

Pence added that Trump has “signed more laws to slash through red tape than any President in American history” to save American business up to $18 billion a year.

He also claimed the decision to leave the Paris Climate Accord will be beneficial to the US, mainly in the area of energy production, particularly as Trump has now approved key pipeline projects and is promoting coal. The development of both these fuel sources were held up by the Clean Power Plan of previous administrations.

Oil, gas and coal are said to be more polluting than so-called “alternative” energy sources – solar, wind, hydro and so on. But these alternative sources do not produce energy in quantities as large as can be generated through oil, gas and coal. So, despite oil and gas being dirty and polluting, the commercial advantage is huge.

Trump says that, under his plan, the US will become an energy exporter for the first time. But with so many other countries turning to alternative energy sources and developing the associated technologies in their countries, there is the possibility that not only will the US be adding to the pollution in the global environment, it will get left behind in terms of the development of clean energy technology and infrastructure.

But Pence is emphatic that the Trump administration’s priority is the economy and getting business sectors like manufacturing back up and running again.

He says: “President Trump promised to get the American economy moving again – and he’s done exactly that. As I’ve traveled the country on behalf of our President, coming to businesses just like Tendon Manufacturing in Ohio, I see each and every day that President Trump has turned our country around – and America is back.”